Saturday, September 11, 2010

Dale Earnhardt Jr. ~ Just Call Him Resilient

[ This article was originally published November 9, 2006, at Insider Racing News ]

Dale Earnhardt Jr. ~ Just Call Him Resilient

By Becca Gladden

To say that Dale Earnhardt, Jr., had a tough day in Texas on Sunday would be an understatement.

From a 10th-place starting spot, Earnhardt battled strep throat, joint aches, nausea and heartburn - along with hard contact with the outside wall on lap 166, which exposed him to carbon monoxide in the cockpit and its accompanying side effects.

He finished sixth in spite of these challenges, climbing one spot to third in the championship point standings with two races to go.

During a post-race press conference, Junior was asked about his team's ability to fight back from such adversity. He replied, "We've been called a lot of things, and it would be great to be called resilient."

Dale, you already have been -- by me.

Over two years ago, I penned a column explaining why I felt that resiliency was Earnhardt Jr.'s single best quality as a race car driver.

Here is that column again:


The Resilient Dale Earnhardt, Jr.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. wears his heart on his sleeve. When he's happy, his smile can light up a room. When he wins a big race, he leaps off his car window with youthful glee into the arms of his proud crew, never questioning for a second whether they will be there to catch him.

Dale Jr. has had good reason to celebrate this year, starting with an important victory in the Daytona 500, the biggest Cup race of all. After his win, Earnhardt's joy was unbridled: "This is awesome!" he exclaimed. "This is the greatest race, this is the greatest day of my life, and I can't really describe it. I don't know if I'll ever be able to tell this story to anybody and get it right. This is just a great feeling."

His sweep of the 2004 Bristol weekend was another meaningful win, partly because he grew up watching his dad race there. "I came to a lot of races here when my dad drove them," Junior explained shortly after his Cup win. "He had some great races here. That's why this place is so magical to me. I've wanted to win here so bad. I never thought I'd win a Busch race and a Cup race the same weekend at Bristol. Good Lord! What a great day!"

Daytona in February and Bristol in August. Two important achievements on Junior's 2004 resume'. But between those peaks was a very dark valley. Practicing for a Le Mans race in July on a weekend off from his NASCAR duties, Earnhardt suffered serious burns when his car crashed, igniting gas from a full fuel tank. He appeared to be immobile in the car for several seconds as the cockpit quickly filled with fire. After being airlifted to a local hospital, fans learned that he had suffered second-degree burns to his face, neck, and legs.

No one would have blamed Earnhardt had he taken a few weeks off to recover from his injuries. Anyone who has suffered a minor kitchen burn knows how painful it is, and Junior's burns were many times worse, both in size and severity. If he was to race any time soon, he would have to endure several uncomfortable hours in a stuffy race car, where summertime temperatures often exceed 130°, wearing a scratchy firesuit over thick bandages. Driver Kenny Wallace spoke later about the burn to Earnhardt's neck: "(In the Le Mans car) he had his drink tube on the left side of his neck because, in road racing, they've got to get in and out of the car. The drink tube got so hot that it melted against his neck. That's incredibly painful."

But surrender is not the racing way. One day after the accident, Dale Jr. was released from the hospital. The next day, he discontinued all narcotic pain medications in advance of the upcoming race just five days away.

Junior started the New Hampshire race that weekend in severe pain. Risking infection, dehydration and further injury, he completed 60 laps before being lifted out of the car by crew members and replaced with a substitute driver. Earnhardt's face was one of anguish throughout the race weekend, particularly when his crew had to force his burned left leg to bend in order to get it in the car. "My injuries really, really hurt bad," he reported after exiting the car. "It's a pain I never felt before."

Casual onlookers may have wondered if Earnhardt's decision to race was careless, even foolhardy (he did have his doctor's permission). But race fans know that resiliency - the ability to recover readily from adversity, depression, injury and the like - is the mark of a winner. Earnhardt needed the points to stay in contention for the championship, and he felt a deep sense of obligation to his team be in the car despite the pain.

In his relatively short Cup career, Dale Jr. has had several opportunities - probably more than he ever wanted - to demonstrate his ability to be resilient.

In his rookie season, Junior's fans shared in an emotional high when he won the 2000 All-Star race, the first rookie ever to do so. He was greeted in Victory Lane by his elated papa, Dale Earnhardt Sr., seven-time Winston Cup champion. Earnhardt Junior still calls it his proudest moment.

Less than a year later, the Earnhardts Senior and Junior were running second and third in the final lap of the Daytona 500, with teammate Michael Waltrip in the lead. As the world now knows, Dale Earnhardt Sr. died in an improbable crash just seconds before his son crossed the finish line. What would have been one of NASCAR's most memorable days disintegrated into it's most tragic, as millions of horrified fans looked on.

After his father's death, Earnhardt Jr. endured both incredible introspection and unyielding scrutiny. The weight of the racing world was on his shoulders now, and he knew it. The fans had lost a legend. Dale Jr. had lost his father. Many wondered whether they could continue to support the sport they loved. Dale Jr. wondered whether he could - or should - ever race again.

NASCAR was devastated, and its ability to recover, it seemed, was completely dependent on his ability to do so.

The following weekend, Earnhardt Jr. arrived at the Dura Lube 400 ready to run. But in a cruel twist of fate he crashed out of the race early on. "I hate it for Junior because this would have really (taken) his mind off it for quite a while, just getting one race behind him," said cousin and crew member Tony Eury Jr.  Observers speculated that the pressure had been too much for him to withstand, that the distractions of the week - which included burying his father - were just too difficult to overcome.

For several weeks the world watched as Dale Jr. continued to race, but he was clearly just going through the motions. As he waged an internal struggle with depression, uncertainty and profound sadness, the Pepsi 400 - NASCAR's upcoming race at the Daytona Speedway - loomed large in the road ahead.

July 7, 2001. Less than 5 months after his dad's death, Dale returned to the track where his father had taken his last breath. In a demonstration of true grit, he won the race. Climbing to the top of his car in the infield, Junior thrust his arms in the air victoriously as a hundred thousand fans cheered him with one voice. "He was with me tonight," Earnhardt Jr. said in an emotionally charged victory lane interview. "I dedicate this win to him."

Resiliency had never been needed more, and he had summoned it in dramatic fashion.

Just two months later, NASCAR and the world faced another tragedy - the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Major sporting events were suspended as the country wondered whether things would ever be normal again. Twelve days later, Dale Jr. won the first post-9/11 Cup race. This time, however, there was no lavish burnout or exuberant celebration. He took a solitary victory lap around Dover Speedway, holding an American flag out the driver's side window. It was an understated display worthy of the circumstances. "I don't think it would have mattered who would have won this race," he confided afterward. "The fact that we're here and we ran it and we're driving and we're racing is healing enough."

Resilient again.

Which brings us back to 2004. Dale Jr. heads into the Chase for the Championship third in points - impressive considering the burns he suffered just two months ago. His team fell into a slump after the incident, including the two races in which Junior reluctantly turned the car over to a substitute driver. While it has taken several weeks to recover, the Bud boys are heading into the Chase with some positive momentum.

Racing has always been a sport of highs and lows, victories and defeats. Incidents that make the difference between taking the checkered flag and taking a trip to the infield care center are often beyond a racer's control. But the drive to recover from adversity, not just once but time and again, comes from within.

In only four years of Cup racing, Dale Jr.'s resiliency has been sorely tested. He has not only survived, but thrived under very trying circumstances. "It's been kind of tough," Earnhardt commented after Bristol. "But when we win like this, it makes it more special.

"You can't be Number One all the time. But that makes the wins sweeter."

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